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JOSEPH KABULETA: Fighting the wildfire is our collective responsibility

watchdog by watchdog
7 years ago
in News, Op-Ed
12 0
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I have learnt that oppression is like a wildfire.
The best place to fight it is when it’s across the valley on the adjacent hill.
But if you see it raging and turn in to sleep, thinking it is far away, you will wake up and find it at your doorstep. And that is often too late.
A month or so ago, when government stepped out to “regulate church activities, curb wealth of pastors blah blah…” we stood up to resist it, but some people on this forum raised all sorts of arguments in support of the oppressor.
Many of those who rejoiced over the harassment of Pastors haven’t seen the inside of a Pentecostal church in years, possibly decades, probably a lifetime. So they were free to front all manner of grandiloquent opinions on how it is government’s duty to protect its citizens from manipulation because the Born Again church is full of charlatans.
I never respond to such arguments because I know that the people who front them have made a deliberate choice to close their eyes to reality. Any adult Ugandan who believes that government — this government of ours —- is suddenly overflowing with concern for its citizens who are being ‘exploited’ by Pastors is either naïve or plain dishonest.
I cannot argue with such a person.
Well, guess what! Now the fire has spread to the music industry and the people who celebrated the subjugation of pastors have finally pulled their heads out of the sand and are seeing this so-called regulation for what it truly is; oppression.
Joseph Kabuleta
Joseph Kabuleta
I have not been to a musical concert, album launch or any such thing in decades.
So I could also be like some of you and cheer government’s suppression of musicians.
I could also pretend that I don’t see the repressive spirit behind the new laws.
I could argue that many artists appear in adverts and not on stage; thereby fleecing the public.
I could make a case for charlatans in the music industry, for copyright theft, for insecurity and lack of hygiene at these concerts, and all such things which actually exist.
I could argue that, in order to root out these malpractices, all musicians should have a minimum qualification of a Diploma in Music Dance and Drama (MDD).
I could also argue that Police is responding to an outcry from music lovers and is moving to stop their exploitation, and then end my discourse by reminding you that government has a right and a duty to protect its citizens from greedy artists.
I could….. but I cannot.
Because that would make me a dishonest person, and I am not.
I know that this government — the exploiter in chief — cannot be concerned about people being exploited. I know that the new regulation of the music industry is all about political control, same as the one for Pastors.  That’s why I will stand with musicians in their quest to fend off the oppressor.
I wrote on this forum how government had put a leash on the media in the guise of regulating it (check my previous posts if you didn’t see it). The media got comfortable in its kennel and supported government’s effort to lock up the Pastors as well. If that succeeds, then both media and Pastors will cheer as the puppet master puts a hook in the jaws of musicians and draws them into the same internment.
Before long every group will either be in passive self-confinement or in actual confinement.
The truth is; we are such an easy lot to subjugate because most people make emotional and fragmented arguments that are based purely on their vantage point. If it does not directly affect them, they will keep quiet at best, or worse, support it, no matter how oppressive it is.
Very few people think collectively or make cut-across arguments.
If I fight for the Pentecostals to enjoy their freedom of worship exercised within the confines of existing laws, I am by extension fighting for other faiths too, including traditionalists. I don’t have to be part of them to believe in their right to self-express. I don’t even have to like them.
If I was in a position of authority, could I legislate against witchdoctors just because I find them distasteful? Who gives me that right? Wouldn’t that make me a tyrant just like the one currently at the top? Possibly even worse?
If everyone had fought the wildfire when it was on the pastors’ hill, it would never have spread to the musicians’ hill. Now it’s our collective responsibility to ensure that this blaze doesn’t spread to any other hill.

Do you have a story in your community or an opinion to share with us: Email us at editorial@watchdoguganda.com
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